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Why Foreign-Owned Companies Must Report LKPM Even If There Are No Activities

Many foreign investors in Indonesia assume that if their company is dormant—no revenue, no transactions, no employees—then reporting obligations are also paused. This assumption is not only incorrect, but potentially dangerous. In Indonesia’s regulatory framework, particularly under the investment monitoring system, all foreign-owned companies (PT PMA) are required to submit LKPM (Investment Activity Reports)—even when there is zero operational activity.

Failure to do so can trigger administrative sanctions, OSS system restrictions, and even risk the revocation of business licenses. This article explains why LKPM reporting remains mandatory, what regulations govern it, and how foreign investors can stay compliant while protecting their business continuity.

What Is LKPM and Why It Exists

LKPM (Laporan Kegiatan Penanaman Modal) is a mandatory report submitted through the Online Single Submission (OSS) system to the Indonesian government. It serves as a tool for monitoring:

  • Realization of investment (capital inflow)
  • Business progress and operational status
  • Employment absorption
  • Challenges faced by investors

From the government’s perspective, LKPM is not just about active business performance—it is about tracking the lifecycle of every registered investment.

Legal Basis: Compliance Is Not Conditional

The obligation to submit LKPM is regulated under:

  • BKPM Regulation No. 5 of 2021
  • Government Regulation No. 5 of 2021 (Risk-Based Business Licensing)

These regulations clearly state that:

All business actors with an OSS-issued license must submit LKPM periodically, regardless of operational status.

This means:

  • A newly established company → must report
  • A company under construction → must report
  • A company not yet operating → must report
  • A dormant or inactive company → still must report

There is no exemption clause for inactivity.

Why Reporting Is Still Required Without Activity

1. The Government Needs Status Transparency

Even if your business is not operating, the government must know:

  • Whether the investment is delayed
  • Whether there are obstacles (land, permits, financing)
  • Whether the company is still committed to operating in Indonesia

A “zero activity” LKPM report provides official status confirmation.

2. Your Business License Remains Active

As long as your company holds:

  • NIB (Business Identification Number)
  • Business licenses via OSS

…it is considered legally active.

And active entities must comply with reporting obligations.

3. Preventing “Ghost Investments”

Indonesia actively monitors “paper companies” or inactive foreign investments that:

  • Hold land or licenses without development
  • Speculate on property or permits
  • Distort investment data

LKPM reporting ensures that your company is legitimate and accountable.

What Happens If You Don’t Submit LKPM?

Ignoring LKPM—even during inactivity—can lead to escalating consequences:

1. OSS System Warnings

You will first receive formal warnings through the OSS system.

2. Business Activity Restrictions

Your account may face:

  • License freezing
  • Inability to update permits
  • Blocked submissions

3. Suspension of Business Licenses

Persistent non-compliance can lead to temporary suspension.

4. License Revocation (Worst Case)

If ignored long enough, the government may revoke your business license entirely.

For foreign investors, this creates serious legal and financial exposure, especially in sectors like real estate and F&B.

What Should You Report If There Is No Activity?

A “zero activity” LKPM report still includes:

  • Investment realization: IDR 0
  • Business activity: Not yet operational
  • Workforce: 0 employees (if applicable)
  • Challenges: explanation (e.g., market conditions, licensing delays)

The key is honest and consistent reporting.

Reporting Frequency

LKPM must be submitted:

  • Quarterly for most businesses
  • Deadlines typically fall:
    • Q1 → April
    • Q2 → July
    • Q3 → October
    • Q4 → January

Missing even one period can start the compliance risk cycle.

Strategic Insight for Foreign Investors

If your company is inactive, you have three strategic options:

1. Maintain Compliance (Recommended)

Continue submitting LKPM regularly while preparing for operations.

2. Officially Suspend or Adjust Business Plan

Update your status transparently through reporting.

3. Close the Company Properly

If you no longer plan to operate, formal liquidation is better than passive non-compliance.

Ignoring the obligation is the worst possible strategy.

Common Misconceptions

  • “We haven’t started, so we don’t need to report” → ❌ Incorrect
  • “No revenue means no LKPM” → ❌ Incorrect
  • “The government won’t notice” → ❌ High risk

Indonesia’s OSS system is increasingly integrated and automated—non-compliance is easily detected.

Why This Matters More in 2026

Indonesia continues to strengthen:

  • Digital compliance systems (OSS RBA)
  • Investment supervision
  • Data-driven policy enforcement

This means less tolerance for administrative negligence, especially for foreign-owned companies.

Conclusion

Submitting LKPM—even with zero activity—is not a burden. It is a basic compliance safeguard that protects your:

  • Business license
  • Investment credibility
  • Legal standing in Indonesia

For foreign investors, staying compliant is not just about avoiding penalties—it’s about building a sustainable and trusted presence in the market.

 

Disclaimer

The information provided here is based on our long experience. The process or requirement may vary depending on the specific facts and conditions. Besides, the law and regulations in Indonesia subject to frequent changes. Please contact us as your consultant to get an up to date information and accurate advice. More Information click here and You can also follow our social media accounts to see the latest information posts. please click on the following links: FacebookInstagramLinkedin, and Twitter.

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